The Quarterly Review, Volume 66; Volume 84William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1840 - English literature |
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Page 156
... human nature , In one light this truthfulness is even an objection . With few ex- ceptions the personages are too like our every - day selves and neighbours to draw any distinct moral from . We cannot see our way clearly . Palliations ...
... human nature , In one light this truthfulness is even an objection . With few ex- ceptions the personages are too like our every - day selves and neighbours to draw any distinct moral from . We cannot see our way clearly . Palliations ...
Page 204
... human nature the most perfect of things , and the Deity to be a sort of abstraction of humanity . Their formula was Homo homini Deus : but a later variety , led onward by the rigorous deductions of Stirner , have rejected even the ...
... human nature the most perfect of things , and the Deity to be a sort of abstraction of humanity . Their formula was Homo homini Deus : but a later variety , led onward by the rigorous deductions of Stirner , have rejected even the ...
Page 522
... humanity , then , that the admirals inter- fered . This cant of humanity , so familiar to those whose policy is most opposed to its dictates , is ever employed to interpose obstacles when rebellion is to be suppressed and law vindi ...
... humanity , then , that the admirals inter- fered . This cant of humanity , so familiar to those whose policy is most opposed to its dictates , is ever employed to interpose obstacles when rebellion is to be suppressed and law vindi ...
Contents
Presbytery examined an Essay Critical and Historical | 78 |
Nineveh and its Remains By Austen Henry Layard | 106 |
Years By C H Hermes | 185 |
Copyright | |
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